Redfin stock plunged as much as 24% Friday following a downbeat earnings report. Second-quarter revenue dropped 21% compared to 2022. “Sales volume is near rock bottom,” CEO Glenn Kelman told analysts on Thursday. Loading Something is loading.
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Redfin stock plunged Friday as the housing market slump hit the real estate company’s second-quarter earnings.
Shares fell as much as 24% following the earnings release on Thursday. Before midday in New York, the stock changed hands at about $11.21, down 22%.
The Seattle-based firm’s revenue fell 21% from a year ago to $275.6 million, narrowly missing Wall Street expectations. Per-share losses narrowed to 25 cents, better than Wall Street’s forecast for a loss of 32 cents a share.
“Sales volume is near rock bottom,” CEO Glenn Kelman told analysts on Thursday.
For the third quarter, Redfin sees revenue dropping about 13% to $265 million-$279 million and losses narrowing to $21 million-$30 million from $90 million.
The company has imposed several rounds of layoffs over the last year, cutting headcount on its sales staff by about a third, while also closing down its home-flipping business, RedfinNow.
“We lost market share due to one-time setbacks from agent layoffs and the closure of RedfinNow, but we expect to return to quarter-over-quarter gains in the second half, as Redfin.com has been competing better for traffic,” Kelman said, adding that Redfin’s gross margins in its core real-estate-services improved by almost two percentage points. “We believe Redfin is set up for profitable growth.”
Limited home inventory and elevated mortgage rates have kept house hunters sidelined and current homeowners reluctant to move, with many holding on to lower mortgage rates secured in prior years.
Meanwhile, higher rates and rising home prices have worsened housing affordability. Redfin data shows that the typical monthly mortgage payment in the US was $2,605 in the four weeks that ended July 30 — a 19% increase from a year ago.